MARIETTA EDUC 253 - Planning and Providing Special Education Services

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Chapter 2 Planning and Providing Special Education ServicesThe Process of Special EducationIndividualized Education Program (IEP)IEP ComponentsIEP Functions and FormatsLeast Restrictive EnvironmentA Continuum of ServicesInclusive EducationArguments For and Against Full InclusionWhere Does Special Education Go from Here?2-1Chapter 2Planning and Providing Special Education ServicesWilliam L. HewardExceptional Children: An Introduction to Special Education, 8eCopyright ©2006 by Pearson Education, Inc.Upper Saddle River, New Jersey 07458All rights reserved.The Process of Special Education•Prereferral Intervention –Provide immediate instructional and/or behavioral assistance•Evaluation and Identification–All children suspected of having a disability must receive a nondiscriminatory multifactored evaluation•Program Planning–An individualized education program must be developed for children identified as having a disability•Placement–The IEP team must determine the least restrictive educational environment that meet the student’s needs•Review and Evaluation–The IEP must be thoroughly and formally reviewed on an annual basis2-2William L. HewardExceptional Children: An Introduction to Special Education, 8eCopyright ©2006 by Pearson Education, Inc.Upper Saddle River, New Jersey 07458All rights reserved.Individualized Education Program (IEP)•IDEA requires that an IEP be developed and implemented for every student with disabilities between the ages of 3 and 21•Individualized family service plans are developed for infants and toddlers from birth to age 3.The IEP team must include the following members: –Parents–Regular education teachers–Special education teachers–LEA representative–An individual who can interpret evaluation results–Others at the discretion of the parent or school–The student (age 14 or older must be invited) 2-3William L. HewardExceptional Children: An Introduction to Special Education, 8eCopyright ©2006 by Pearson Education, Inc.Upper Saddle River, New Jersey 07458All rights reserved.IEP Components•The IEP must include:–A statement of present levels of educational performance–A statement of annual goals–A statement of special education and related services–An explanation of the extent to which the student will not participate with nondisabled children–Individual modifications–The projected date for the beginning and duration of services–A statement of how the child will be assessed–Beginning at age 14, a statement of transition service needs must be included–Beginning at age 16, an individual transition plan must be developed2-4William L. HewardExceptional Children: An Introduction to Special Education, 8eCopyright ©2006 by Pearson Education, Inc.Upper Saddle River, New Jersey 07458All rights reserved.IEP Functions and Formats•IEP formats vary widely across school districts•Properly including all of the mandated components in an IEP is no guarantee that the document will guide the student’s learning and the teachers’ teaching •The purpose is to create a document that goes beyond compliance with the law and actually functions as a meaningful guide2-5William L. HewardExceptional Children: An Introduction to Special Education, 8eCopyright ©2006 by Pearson Education, Inc.Upper Saddle River, New Jersey 07458All rights reserved.Least Restrictive Environment•LRE is the setting that is closest to a regular school program that meets the child’s special educational needs•The IEP team must determine if the annual goals and short-term objectives can be achieved in the regular classroom–Removal from the regular classroom should take place when the severity of the disability is such that an appropriate education cannot be achieved–Placement must not be regarded as permanent2-6William L. HewardExceptional Children: An Introduction to Special Education, 8eCopyright ©2006 by Pearson Education, Inc.Upper Saddle River, New Jersey 07458All rights reserved.A Continuum of Services2-7William L. HewardExceptional Children: An Introduction to Special Education, 8eCopyright ©2006 by Pearson Education, Inc.Upper Saddle River, New Jersey 07458All rights reserved.Inclusive Education•Inclusion means educating students with disabilities in regular classrooms –Studies have shown that well-planned, carefully conducted inclusion can be generally effective with students of all ages, types, and degrees of disability•A few special educators believe that the LRE principle should give way to full inclusion, in which all students with disabilities are placed full time in regular classrooms2-8William L. HewardExceptional Children: An Introduction to Special Education, 8eCopyright ©2006 by Pearson Education, Inc.Upper Saddle River, New Jersey 07458All rights reserved.Arguments For and Against Full Inclusion•Pro –LRE legitimates restrictive environments–Confuses segregation and integration with intensity of services–Is based on a “readiness model”–Supports the primacy of professional decision making–Sanctions infringements on people’s rights–Implies that people must move as they develop and change–Directs attention to physical settings rather than to the services and supports people need•Con–Placing a child in a general education setting is no guarantee he will learn or be accepted–General education teachers are often not sufficiently trained–System of supports often not available–No clear definition of what inclusion means2-9William L. HewardExceptional Children: An Introduction to Special Education, 8eCopyright ©2006 by Pearson Education, Inc.Upper Saddle River, New Jersey 07458All rights reserved.Where Does Special Education Go from Here?•The promise of a free, appropriate public education for all children with disabilities is an ambitious one, but substantial progress has been made toward fulfillment of that promise •Implementation of IDEA has brought problems of funding, inadequate teacher training, and opposition by some to inclusion of children with disabilities in regular classrooms•Regardless of where services are delivered, the most crucial variable is the quality of instruction that each child receives2-102-1William L. HewardExceptional Children: An Introduction to Special Education, 8eCopyright ©2006 by Pearson Education, Inc.Upper Saddle River, New Jersey 07458All rights


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